Plot

With the help of a sometimes invisible dragon known as Elliott, the orphan Pete escapes the clutches of his tyrannical ‘owner’ Lena Grogan. In the town of Passamaquoddy, the drunken lighthouse keeper Lampie and his daughter Nora grant Pete refuge. Pete’s attempts to settle down and lead a normal life are thwarted by the pursuing Lena and the travelling medicine man Dr Terminus who wants to put Elliott on display, not to mention Elliott whose invisible presence causes chaos in the town.

Although everybody thought that Who Framed Roger Rabbit? (1988) was dazzlingly innovative, the idea of blending live-action and animation was something that Disney had been doing for at least forty years before that. Their first feature to do so was The Reluctant Dragon (1941). Most famously there was Mary Poppins (1964) and Pete’s Dragon was another of these.

Pete’s Dragon is not a particularly memorable effort – indeed, it is one Disney film that the public seem to have forgotten altogether. In principle it is workable and some of the scenes – like the ones with Pete tossing apples into Elliott’s mouth or a forlorn Elliott trying to play noughts and crosses on its chest with a piece of charcoal – are cute enough. The animation is reasonably good, as is its blending with live-action – and the live-action special effects with the invisible Elliott are excellent. However, the plot is wafer slim, the songs utterly forgettable. Moreover, the film is dominated by a high degree of slapstick, which by that point in time had almost entirely taken over Disney’s live-action films – the shrieking excess to which Jim Dale and Shelley Winters overplay is thoroughly awful.